Drew revived the quiet Boston offense with a stellar performance, and the Red Sox beat the Baltimore Orioles 7-3 Saturday night in a game that featured a memorable and destructive tirade by Ortiz.

Starting for the sixth time since coming off the disabled list with a strained hamstring, Drew hit a three-run shot in the fourth inning and connected with a man on in the sixth. It was his second career two-homer game, and the five RBI tied a career high. He came in batting .223 with five homers and 32 RBIin 71 games.

"The past couple of games, I've felt good at the plate, but had no luck," Drew said. "It's just good to turn around and have a good outcome. It was also a good win. That's what we really needed."

Boston had lost six of its previous nine to fall out of first place in the AL East for the first time in 60 days.

After Shane Victorino homered in the seventh to make it 7-2, Ortiz took three balls from Jairo Acencio before umpire Tim Timmons called a strike on a high fastball. Ortiz was furious, and he fully vented that frustration after taking another strike and then striking out with a futile swing.

He yelled at Timmons and was ejected. Ortiz then destroyed the covers of two dugout phones with his bat before charging onto the field, where he was restrained by manager John Farrell and bench coach Torey Lovullo.

Ortiz finally relented, but as a final gesture he threw an elbow pad in Timmons' direction. Teammate Dustin Pedroia, who covered up to avoid being hit by the spray of shattered plastic, finally got the enraged Ortiz under control.

"I got 17 years in the league and I don't think I deserve to be disrespected like that," Ortiz said. "You want to get respect from the players, you respect the players. That was horrible. Both of the pitches, not one.

"The funny thing is he wanted to act like it was the right call," Ortiz added. "I don't play that. I hit. You're not going to take my at-bats away."

The antics of Big Papi didn't detract from a much-needed victory against a strong division rival.

"We swung the bats great," Pedroia said. "It's a good win. We have to build on that. Guys get frustrated. It's part of the game. I just wanted to make sure David didn't get too bad where he gets suspended or any of that. ... He's the biggest part of our lineup. We can't afford to lose David for even one game."

PHOTOS: ALWAYS ENTERTAINING MLB EJECTIONS

Sept. 25: Brewers center fielder Carlos Gomez is ejected after confronting Braves players after hitting a home run in the first inning. (Photo: Dale Zanine, USA TODAY Sports)

Umpire Andy Fletcher ejects Adrian Gonzalez of the Los Angeles Dodgers for arguing a call at home plate during the sixth inning against the Arizona Diamondbacks. (Photo: Christian Petersen, Getty Images)

Sept. 15: Boston Red Sox first baseman Mike Napoli, left, is ejected from the game by home plate umpire Ron Kulpa during the sixth inning against the New York Yankees. (Photo: Bob DeChiara, USA TODAY Sports)

Sept. 13: Texas Rangers starting pitcher Matt Garza argues with the home plate umpire after being thrown out of the game against the Oakland Athletics at Rangers Ballpark. (Photo: Tim Heitman, USA TODAY Sports)

Sept. 12: Umpire Bill Miller ejects Ron Gardenhire of the Minnesota Twins as umpire Dale Scott looks on during the fourth inning of the game against the Oakland Athletics. (Photo: Hannah Foslien, Getty Images)

Aug. 17: Tigers manager Jim Leyland, left, was ejected when a call went against Detroit. Leyland directed his tirade at first base umpire Bob Davidson, right, and had to be restrained by second base umpire John Hirschbeck, center. (Photo: Duane Burleson, AP)

Aug. 10: Pirates manager Clint Hurdle is ejected from the game by second base umpire Adrian Johnson after arguing a call when Johnson called Alex Presley out in a double play by Troy Tulowitzki in the seventh inning. (Photo: Doug Pensinger, Getty Images)

Red Sox DH David Ortiz, right, had to be restrained by manager John Farrell, center, and bench coach Torey Lovullo after being ejected on July 27 in Baltimore. Ortiz also took out his frustration on a dugout phone, shattering it to pieces with a bat. (Photo: Joy R. Absalon, USA TODAY Sports)

Chicago Cubs manager Dale Sveum argues with home plate umpire Dana DeMuth after being thrown out of the third inning of the the game against the Arizona Diamondbacks at Chase Field on July 23. (Photo: Christian Petersen, Getty Images)

Manny Machado of the Baltimore Orioles exchanges words after a strikeout call by home plate umpire Will Little in the fifth inning. Little then ejected Machado from the game. (Photo: Jonathan Ernst, Getty Images)

Home plate umpire Andy Fletcher throws Cleveland Indians manager Terry Francona out of the game in the eighth inning during the game against the Detroit Tigers at Comerica Park on June 8 in Detroit. (Photo: Leon Halip, Getty Images)

Dodgers manager Don Mattingly argues with umpire Brian knight about a play at second during the sixth inning. Mattingly was ejected from the game for the first time this season. (Photo: Barry Gutierrez, AP)

Mets manager Terry Collins (left) is ejected from the game by second base umpire Adrian Johnson (right) after the sixth inning of a game against the Yankees at Citi Field. (Photo: Brad Penner, USA TODAY Sports)

Manager Mike Scioscia of the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim argues with plate umpire Marty Foster (Center) and Tim Welke after a third strike on Jeff Francoeur of the Kansas City Royals was overturned to a foul ball in the ninth inning at Kauffman Stadium. Sciosia was ejected from the game. (Photo: Ed Zurga, Getty Images)

Manager Bruce Bochy of the San Francisco Giants argues with umpire Alfonso Marquez after Marco Scutaro was called out in the eighth inning at AT,T Park in San Francisco, Calif. Bochy was ejected. (Photo: Ezra Shaw, Getty Images)

Chris Getz of the Kansas City Royals and manager Ned Yost of the Kansas City Royals argue with second base umpire Marty Foster after Mike Trout of the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim was called safe on a steal in Kansas City, Mo. Getz was ejected. (Photo: Ed Zurga, Getty Images)

Home plate umpire John Tumpane ejects Kurt Suzuki of the Washington Nationals after Suzuki struck out looking in the ninth inning of the Nationals 2-1 loss to the Chicago Cubs at Nationals Park in Washington, DC. (Photo: Rob Carr, Getty Images)

Umpire Tim Timmons tells Pirates starting pitcher Jonathan Sanchez he has been ejected after hitting St. Louis Cardinals first baseman Allen Craig with a pitch during the game at Busch Stadium. (Photo: Scott Rovak, USA TODAY Sports)

Toronto Blue Jays manager John Gibbons reacts as home plate umpire Mike DiMuro ejects him during an argument over a strikeout call against Toronto's Brett Lawrie in the ninth inning against the Baltimore Orioles in Baltimore. (Photo: Patrick Semansky, AP)

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Ryan Dempster (6-8) gave up two runs in 5 1/3 innings to earn his first win in five starts since June 30. His previous four starts were no-decisions.

Both of Drew's homers came off Scott Feldman (2-2), making his fifth appearance since coming to the Orioles in a trade with the Chicago Cubs. Feldman allowed four runs and six hits in five innings.

Baltimore's Chris Davis went 1-for-3 with a walk and two strikeouts, the 21st consecutive game in which the major league home run leader has struck out. He has fanned eight times in his last three games and hasn't homered since hitting No. 37 on July 14.

Boston went up 1-0 in the third when Drew singled and came home on a single by Jacoby Ellsbury. That provided a note of optimism for a slumping team that had produced only one run in its previous two games and came in with a 42-9 record when scoring first.

Feldman got two outs in the fourth before Mike Carp and Jarrod Saltalamacchia singled. Drew followed with his first home run since June 4.

"It really just came down to that fourth inning," Feldman said. "Gave up a couple two-out knocks and then made a bad pitch to Drew and he hit it over the fence."

Baltimore closed to 4-1 in the fifth on an RBI single by Brian Roberts, but another homer by Drew provided the Red Sox with a five-run cushion in the sixth. The drive hit the top of the wall in right field, and although umpires initially ruled the ball in play, they adjourned for a replay and ultimately called it a home run.

After the Orioles got a sixth-inning run on a grounder by Matt Wieters, Victorino homered on Asencio's first pitch of the night to make it 7-2 in the seventh.

J.J. Hardy singled in a run in the eighth for Baltimore.

NOTES: The start of the game was delayed by rain for 27 minutes. ... Boston improved to 3-6 against Baltimore this season. The Red Sox lost nine of their previous 11 games at Camden Yards. ... Orioles right-hander Jason Hammel seeks his first win since May 27 in the finale of the three-game series Sunday. Jon Lester, 14-2 lifetime against Baltimore, starts for Boston. ... Baltimore 2B Ryan Flaherty turned 27 Saturday. He hasn't had an at-bat since the All-Star break. ... Hardy went 1-for-2 against Dempster and is 3-for-32 lifetime against the right-hander.